The final bell was a death knell for another day, another empty victory. I stayed seated long after the classroom cleared, the silence a familiar blanket. My phone was a cold weight in my hand, the screen showing the only family photo I had: me as a baby, and a woman with eyes full of a future she'd never see. My mother. My life began with her ending. The story never got any brighter.
"Hey. Hollow boy. You planning on fossilizing in here, or are you coming with us?"
Niran's voice was a bombastic blast of reality in the quiet. He filled the doorway, his grin a challenge. Behind him, Preecha stood like a silent sentinel, his observant eyes missing nothing. He gave a slight, almost imperceptible nod. He understood the silence. He just chose to stand outside of it.
"Just thinking," I said, the words automatic. A shield.
"Thinking about how to make that face even more serious, I bet,"
Niran laughed, clapping a hand on my shoulder and pulling me up. I didn't resist. Their presence was the only gravity I had.
Dao was waiting by the lockers. Her smile was smaller than Niran's, but it felt more real. More meant for me. She fell into step beside me, a constant, steady presence.
"You didn't eat," she said, not as an accusation, but a fact. She pulled some chips from her bag and pressed them into my hand. Her fingers brushed mine, a spark of warmth in my perpetual cold.
"You can't just forget, Raf."
I couldn't. I remembered everything. The loneliness was a photo album I couldn't close. But with them, the pages didn't hurt as much.
The walk home was our daily ritual. Niran dominated the conversation, Preecha dissected it with razor-sharp quiet comments, and Dao walked beside me, her shoulder a whisper away from mine. For a few blocks, the hollow space in my chest didn't feel so empty. It almost felt like living.
Then we turned the corner by the old fruit market. The air changed.
It wasn't a smell or a sound. It was a pressure. A wrongness. The vibrant market colors seemed to bleach out for a split second. And I saw it, a sliver of absolute blackness, a rip in the fabric of everything, slithering between the crates of rotting fruit. It was a shadow that ate the light.
Dao's hand suddenly gripped my arm, her nails digging in. "Raf… did you…?"
A deafening screech tore the world in half.
Time didn't slow down. It shattered.
There was a blur of screaming metal, a monstrous eye of a headlight, and the smell of burning rubber. I didn't think. My body moved on an instinct I never knew I had. I shoved, a desperate, useless act against an avalanche.
I didn't shove them to safety. I shoved them away from me.
The impact was a universe of pain collapsing into a single point. My body was a doll made of glass and kindling. I felt bones scream, felt the wet, hot tear of things inside me breaking. The world became a carousel of sky, pavement, and twisted metal.
A horn blared. Screeching brakes. A flash of metal.
And everything went black.
***
The crash didn't kill me.
It left me trapped instead.
Days passed. Weeks. My body remained in a hospital bed, machines hissing and beeping, while my mind drifted somewhere far deeper. I had fallen into a coma, lost in a silence that felt endless.
And through the roaring in my ears, I heard them. Their voices, weaving into a final, desperate prayer.
"Please… please, no… just let him live…"*
Niran's voice, raw, all laughter gone.
"I'll give it all… my joy, my peace… take it, just don't take him…"
Dao's voice, a sob woven with a terrifying offer.
"...my silence, my future… whatever's left of me… it's yours…"
Preecha's vow, the most valuable thing he had.
Their words weren't just words. They were contracts. Signed in blood and hope and despair.
And someone was there to hear them. To *
collect.
The pain vanished. The world vanished.
I was nowhere. Floating in a silent, black ocean. This was death. It was… peaceful.
"Delicious."
The voice was not a sound. It was a vibration that rewrote my DNA. It was deep, rich, and dripped with a pleasure so ancient and terrible it froze the core of my soul.
Chains erupted from the void around me, cold and solid, wrapping my wrists, my ankles, my throat. They pinned me in the nothingness.
A figure coalesced from the darkness. He was… glorious. Impossibly perfect features, skin that seemed carved from moonlight, and eyes that glowed with the cold fire of a dying star. He was beautiful the way a supernova is beautiful, a spectacle of absolute destruction. Chains, countless and intricate, trailed from his body like the train of a royal robe, each link whispering of a thousand broken promises.
He was the most terrifying thing I had ever seen.
"Such potent offerings,"
he purred, the void drinking his words.
"Laughter. Hope. Silence. All the sweetest morsels. They pour their hearts out so willingly into the dark. And I…"
He smiled, and it was a predator's smile.
"I simply caught them."
He took a step closer. The chains around me tightened.
"I am the God of death and loneliness, the Beetle of Death. My name is Kephriel."
The name hit me with the force of a physical blow. This wasn't an angel. This was a collector. A vulture.
"You live because of them,"
he said, his voice a taunt.
"Their grief is your fuel. Their despair is your anchor. You are a monument to their sacrifice. And now… you belong to me."
The chains glowed with a sickly blue light, searing into my spirit. This wasn't salvation. It was a damnation paid for by the only people I cared about.
"Welcome to the truth of your existence, Rafael Sakda."
---
I woke up.
The beeping was the first thing I heard. A steady, mechanical rhythm that meant I was alive. The smell was antiseptic and bleach. A hospital.
Sunlight streamed through a window. Days? Weeks had passed.
A doctor stood at the foot of my bed, his face a polite mask. He held a clipboard like a shield.
"Mr. Sakda. Good to see you're finally with us. The surgeries were… extensive. The treatments we administered pulled you back from the brink."
A flicker of something, relief? Then his expression tightened.
"However,"
he continued, his voice losing its warmth, becoming clinical, final.
"The costs have… significantly exceeded what your insurance and available funds can cover. The outstanding balance is substantial."
He wasn't looking at me, the survivor. He was looking at a line item on a spreadsheet.
"I'm sorry," he said, the words utterly meaningless. "Without payment, we have no choice but to discharge you. Effective immediately."
He placed the clipboard on the bedside table and left without another word.
The door clicked shut.
The beeping of the heart monitor was the only sound. I was alive. My friends had sold pieces of their souls to a god of death to make it happen.
And now, because I had no money, the world was throwing me back out onto the street.
The hollow space in my chest wasn't empty anymore. It was filled with the cold, heavy chains of a debt I could never repay.
